1. Field of the Invention
The present invention pertains to fiber laser-based systems, and, more particularly, to large mode area, low numerical aperture fiber laser applications.
2. Description of the Related Art
Many military and civilian applications rely on optical techniques such as laser detection and ranging (“LADAR”) or directed energy (“DE”) techniques. Both of these types of techniques employ a focused, coherent optical signal, such as a laser. Both of these techniques also find use in high performance or otherwise demanding applications, although the contexts for those applications may vary widely. These contexts are frequently military, but many are civilian. For instance, these types of optical systems are used in terrain mapping; construction site surveying and monitoring; autonomous vehicle navigation; hazardous environment control; industrial laser machining, welding, and manufacturing process control; remote sensing; free space optical communications; and medical and dental diagnostic imaging.
Many high performance applications for, e.g., LADAR and DE techniques, incorporate demanding design constraints. Conventional lasers and optics for conditioning and transmitting the laser signal can be bulky and heavy. Most high performance applications not only have tight requirements for low weight and small bulk, but also high power. The requirement for high power generally exacerbates the weight and bulk issues, as well. Thus, the search for alternatives to conventional lasers and optics continues.
One approach employs a fiber laser to mitigate some of these problems. Fiber lasers are, generally, lighter, more compact, lower heat, self-aligning, and more energy efficient than the conventional lasers used in these type applications. A fiber laser is generally an optical fiber doped with substances that, when appropriately excited, acts as a waveguide, amplifies and emits a laser signal. For example, a fiber laser may be a Germanium (Ge) doped double-clad fibers made “active” by doping the core with gain materials (e.g., Ytterbium or Erbium) that when excited by pump energy in the clad amplifies a seed laser signal. Selection of the dopants depends on the output wavelength of interest. For instance, Erbium is used for 1550 nm whereas Ytterbium is used for 1064 nm. The injection of pump light in the cladding of the double-clad actively doped fiber amplifiers serves as the excitation method. Dopant concentrations, pump power, and length of active fiber determine the resulting gain. The only electrical energy used is to drive seed diode and pump diodes. For operational reasons, the output end of the fiber laser is usually fused to a piece of compatible inactive fiber (i.e., only doped with Ge and not doped with a gain material) that is “mode coupled.” The laser signal is then delivered from the fiber laser through the mode coupled delivery fiber.
However, current fiber lasers and mode coupled fiber delivery approaches are limited either in their power tolerance (i.e., laser induced damage threshold, or “LIDT”) or laser beam quality (e.g., times diffraction limit, or M2) because they tend to rely on a single fiber optic channel. For example, a conventional single mode optical fiber has a very small mode field diameter, and therefore, higher energy densities at its fiber/air interface and lower LIDT. Increasing the mode field diameter without limiting the number of guided modes may improve LIDT, but it increases output M2 reducing delivered beam quality.
Current fiber lasers use low numerical aperture (“NA”), large mode area (“LMA”) delivery fibers to meet the most stringent time diffraction limit (M2) beam quality requirements. Lowering the NA limits the number of guided modes to just a few in order to achieve single mode like output (M2=1) where NA=(n12−n22)1/2, n1 is the core refractive index, and n2 is the cladding refractive index. In order to have a fiber optic waveguide n1>n2; so, NA describes the difference in density between core and clad. This creates a physical limit to how low a NA one can achieve without losing waveguide properties. And, the lower the NA, the longer the focal length collimator required to collimate a large beam for minimizing the divergence for Ladar, DE, etc. type applications. The longer the focal length, the more volume that is required in a conventional collimator approach. Increasing mode field diameter reduces non-linear effects and increases power tolerance.
Termination of these delivery fibers is usually done with an end-cap and a positive singlet. This approach cannot satisfy most tactical packaging constraints for demanding LADAR and directed energy because its optical path is too long, requiring additional bulk optics. The longer optical path also makes conventional collimators more temperature sensitive and sensitive to optical alignment issues.
Another factor in the performance of these optical systems is the “lens form.” A lens form is a lens design type. A lens form is usually identified by its shape or purpose and each lens form carries certain optical imaging characteristics. Thus, lens forms are categorized based on their purpose and are the result of optimizing to satisfy various combinations of aperture and field of view. No single optical design can satisfy all constraints. Furthermore, an optical design is optimum for only one set of constraints. However, similar applications will trend toward the same lens form as the optimum solution.
The fiber optic collimator lens forms conventionally used with fiber lasers are significantly impacted by the issues discussed above. In general, a lens form is of arbitrary dimension a can be scaled or modified to satisfy specific application requirements. However, certain physical characteristics of the lens form are not scalable beyond certain limits. For instance, the focal length of the lens form will be largely a function of the output numerical aperture of the fiber laser. It will simply take a certain distance for the laser signal to diverge sufficiently for it to then be collimated for conditioning and transmission. This is unfortunate, because many LADAR systems prize small size in addition to lightweight.
The present invention is directed to resolving, or at least reducing, one or all of the problems mentioned above.
The present invention is, in its various aspects and embodiments, a compact collimator lens form. The lens form generally comprises a length of optical fiber terminated on at least one end thereof; a negative optical element optically aligned with the terminated end of the optical fiber; and a positive optical element optically aligned with the negative optical element. In one embodiment, the lens form comprises an endcap; a length of optical fiber terminated at one end thereof by the endcap; a negative lens optically aligned with the optical fiber output path; and a positive lens optically aligned with the negative lens. In another embodiment, the lens form comprises an endcap having a concave face formed in a first end thereof; a length of optical fiber terminated at one end thereof by affixation to a second end of the endcap; and a positive lens optically aligned with the output path of the optical fiber.
The invention may be understood by reference to the following description taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in which like reference numerals identify like elements, and in which:
While the invention is susceptible to various modifications and alternative forms, the drawings illustrate specific embodiments herein described in detail by way of example. It should be understood, however, that the description herein of specific embodiments is not intended to limit the invention to the particular forms disclosed, but on the contrary, the intention is to cover all modifications, equivalents, and alternatives falling within the spirit and scope of the invention as defined by the appended claims.
Illustrative embodiments of the invention are described below. In the interest of clarity, not all features of an actual implementation are described in this specification. It will of course be appreciated that in the development of any such actual embodiment, numerous implementation-specific decisions must be made to achieve the developers' specific goals, such as compliance with system-related and business-related constraints, which will vary from one implementation to another. Moreover, it will be appreciated that such a development effort, even if complex and time-consuming, would be a routine undertaking for those of ordinary skill in the art having the benefit of this disclosure.
The length of optical fiber 106 comprises, in the illustrated embodiment, a low NA, LMA fiber. It can therefore be fused directly to the delivery fiber of a fiber laser. Consider, for instance, the optical apparatus 200 shown in
A variety of splicing techniques for optical fibers are known in various arts. Laser fusion techniques typically are performed in a manufacturing facility. This nullifies one advantage of the illustrated embodiment. The illustrated embodiment is a pigtail, and is therefore amenable to use as a line replaceable unit for repairs or retrofits in the field. Thus, the fusion splice 209 may be formed using field techniques employed in, for example, the telecommunications art. Such fusion techniques include arc fusion splicing and filament fusion splicing. Thus, some embodiments may be deployed as line replaceable units. This aspect of the present invention also facilitates future upgrades in fiber laser or sensor technology in optical systems.
It will be apparent to those skilled in the art having the benefit of the disclosure that the invention admits some variation in the implementation of the optical fiber 106. As in the illustrated embodiment, the optical fiber 106 may be an ordinary length of low NA, LMA optical fiber. Alternatively, the optical fiber 106 might be a spliced combination of a low NA, LMA optical fiber and a mode coupled delivery fiber. Or, the endcap 103, shown in
Referring again to
Referring now to
The focal length f of the lens form 100 is approximately twice the length L, shown in FIG. 1—i.e., the distance from the focus or back of the endcap 109 to the front vertex of the positive lens 112. In conventional lens forms, the focal length f, shown in
Note that there may be alternative ways in which to introduce this accelerated divergence, and so the present invention admits variation in the structure of the lens form. Consider
As those in the art having the benefit of this disclosure will appreciate, conventional endcaps such as the endcap 103 are typically comprised of a Silica pellet or a large multimode silica fiber with a large core and no cladding. The Silica pellet is polished flat on each end, and one flat, polished end is then fused to an optical fiber. This generally describes the fabrication of the endcap 103 and its affixation to the optical fiber 106 in
The lens form 400 shown in
The lens form 400 is also, like the lens form 100 in
More particularly, the LADAR apparatus 600 is a gimbaled LADAR system. One type of LADAR system employs what is known as a “scanned illumination” technique for acquiring data. More technically, a LADAR transceiver aboard a platform transmits the laser signal to scan a geographical area called a “scan pattern”. The laser signal is typically a pulsed, split-beam laser signal. The LADAR transceiver aboard the platform transmits the laser signal. The laser signal is continuously reflected back to the platform, which receives the reflected laser signal. Note, however, that some implementations employ a continuous beam, an unsplit beam, or a continuous, unsplit beam.
Each scan pattern is generated by scanning elevationally, or vertically, several times while scanning azimuthally, or horizontally, once within the field of view for the platform. Thus, each scan pattern is defined by a plurality of elevational and azimuthal scans. The principal difference between the successive scan patterns is the location of the platform at the start of the scanning process. An overlap between the scan patterns is determined by the velocity of the platform. The velocity, depression angle of the sensor with respect to the horizon, and total azimuth scan angle of the LADAR platform determine the scan pattern on the ground. Note that, if the platform is relatively stationary, the overlap may be complete, or nearly complete.
The platform typically maintains a steady heading while the laser signal is transmitted at varying angles relative to the platform's heading to achieve the scans. The optics package of the LADAR transceiver that generates and receives the laser signal is typically “gimbaled”, or mounted in structure that rotates relative to the rest of the platform. Exemplary gimbaled LADAR transceivers are disclosed in:
The exemplary gimbaled LADAR systems disclosed in the patents listed above, as well as others known to the LADAR art, may be modified to accommodate the present invention. The LADAR apparatus 600 is, in fact, a modification of the seeker head set forth in the listed patents. Note that the gimbal has been omitted from
Referring now to
The beamlets 612 then pass through an aperture 615 of an apertured mirror 618, and subsequently reflected from a scanning mirror 620 in a forward direction relative to the platform (not otherwise shown). The apertured mirror 615 acts as a passive optical switch for the optical transceiver—that is, it allows outgoing transmit beams and incoming return beams to share a common gimbal and elevation scanning mechanisms and telescope. The aperture 615 is located off the center of the aperture mirror 618. The scanning mirror 620 is pivotally driven by a scanning drive motor 623, which is operable to cyclically scan the beamlets 912 for scanning the target area. In a preferred embodiment, the beamlets 612 are preferably scanned at a rate of approximately 100 Hz. The scanning mirror 620 scans the beamlets 612 in elevation while the operation of the gimbal (not shown) scans them in azimuth.
A comparison of
As noted above, the LADAR apparatus 600 of
Table 2 sets for the selected specifications for optical requirements. In Table 2, with respect to insertion loss, a measurement T of throughput transmittance of T>95% should be acceptable. Note that output beam quality (M2) will depend to some degree on fiber and laser source mode coupling. In general, MIL or Telcordia spec in terms of construction and processes is preferred for this particular implementation and coefficient of thermal expansion (“CTE”) matched and Near Infrared (“IR”) transmissive materials are used when possible. CTE impacts both performance over operational temperatures as well as end of life requirements as dissimilar or CTE mismatched materials will tend to have thermal instabilities as well as reliability issues.
The overall envelope for the optical apparatus 200 has a length <1.537″ (39 mm) and outer diameter <0.394″ (10 mm). A lightweight 3 mm stainless steel armored jacket for fiber protection and strain relief and minimum package length may be used. The application holds fiber bend radius to greater than 1.5″, so a rubber boot may be desirable for additional strain relief and reduced fiber bend sensitivity. The optical fiber 106 has a length between 1 and 2 meters. Table 3 sets forth commercially available components for the construction of the lens form 100 in this implementation. For high power tolerance, an epoxy-free optical path is utilized. Epoxies are only used to retain components or provide strain relief. To prevent contaminants from critical internal optical surfaces, the packaging is sealed.
Additional performance characteristics are graphically presented in the attached drawings.
Note that, in the LADAR apparatus 600 in
The on-gimbal optical train consequently adds size, weight, complexity, and cost to the LADAR transceiver. The on-gimbal laser cavity also requires a fiber coupled laser diode pump which is a significant cost driver. Furthermore, current delivery and alignment techniques for the bulk optics are inefficient, sensitive to tolerances and temperature, and limit the output power per channel and therefore limits the signal-to-noise ratio in a multi-beam LADAR system.
The prevalence and manner of use of optical fiber in the present invention, however, permits the present invention to move the fiber laser 206 off the gimbal (not otherwise shown). More particularly, the optical fiber 106 and the delivery fiber 203 act as a waveguide for the laser signal 118 as it propagates from the fiber laser 206 to the lens form 100. Physical alignment is therefore not necessary, since the waveguide facilitates a self aligned optical delivery system. This permits additional advantages in cost, weight, complexity, and temperature and alignment sensitivities over and above those offered by the embodiments disclosed above. Furthermore, although this may lengthen the overall optical apparatus 200, the focal length of the lens form 100 is unaffected.
The present invention also permits the use of modular negative elements of varying negative power, or “variable negative elements”, in fiber laser systems for conditioning the laser signal. A small modular negative element assembly such as that provided by the invention in this embodiment has two primary advantages:
Those in the art having the benefit of this disclosure will appreciate further advantages and benefits arising from this particular embodiment of the invention, as well.
Thus, in its various embodiments and aspects thereof, the present invention presents a compact collimator lens form for large mode area (“LMA”) and low numerical aperture (“NA”) fiber laser applications. This compact collimator lens form provides tactical electro-optical (“EO”) systems a small form factor for fiber delivery termination and large beam collimation. The design is reusable, scalable, and provides a common approach for applications from directed energy (“DE”) to LADAR sensors. It also employs a modular component design for accommodating different fiber NAs or mission specific output beam requirements. Various embodiments may:
The present invention therefore facilitates:
This concludes the detailed description. The particular embodiments disclosed above are illustrative only, as the invention may be modified and practiced in different but equivalent manners apparent to those skilled in the art having the benefit of the teachings herein. Furthermore, no limitations are intended to the details of construction or design herein shown, other than as described in the claims below. It is therefore evident that the particular embodiments disclosed above may be altered or modified and all such variations are considered within the scope and spirit of the invention. Accordingly, the protection sought herein is as set forth in the claims below.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 11283369 | Nov 2005 | US |
Child | 12623739 | US |